The Daily Telegraph

‘Butcher’ Leopold II’S name taken off Brussels tunnel by public vote

- By Jack Parrock in Brussels

THE name of the Belgian king responsibl­e for the murders of millions of people in the former Belgian Congo has been removed from the longest road tunnel in Brussels.

The Leopold II tunnel is being rebranded as the Annie Cordy tunnel – a Belgian singer who died aged 92 last year – following a public vote.

“This is a first, symbolic step towards a better balance in the naming of public spaces,” said Elke Van den Brandt, Brussels’ minister of mobility.

But while the mile-and-a-half tunnel is having its name changed, the arterial road under which it passes will continue to be called Boulevard Leopold II.

Brussels city authoritie­s say it would cause significan­t disruption to force everyone living on the road to re-register their addresses.

Activist Mireille Tsheusi-robert is a fierce advocate of erasing any traces of King Leopold II from Belgian streets.

She says she is happy that it is a woman’s name but that it is a “disgrace” that the woman is white.

“It should have been one of the many brilliant Congolese women who fought the oppression of the evil colonialis­t ruler,” Ms Tsheusi-robert told The Daily Telegraph. Annie Cordy was one of 15 names for whom more than 30,000 people were able to vote during the renaming process. She won a fifth of the ballots. Her songs, however, include Hot

Cocoa, which she often performed wearing mock African dress.

Last June, a group of Black Lives Matter protesters climbed on to a large statue of King Leopold II in Brussels while waving the flag of the Democratic Republic of Congo, reigniting the public debate about decolonial­isation.

Since then a number of monuments to the man branded the “butcher of the Congo” have been taken down – in Ghent and in Antwerp – but many others remain.

The topic of removing names and statues in Belgium is as complex as it is sensitive.

The far-right Vlaams Belang party, for instance, believes that history should be retained, but as Flemish nationalis­ts, the political group opposes the monarch and believes no king should be celebrated.

 ??  ?? A Brussels Black Lives Matter protester holds a portrait of the king
A Brussels Black Lives Matter protester holds a portrait of the king

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